A perfect (and perfectly scary) title from Jessica Wildfire (@jessicawildfire) —

"If a Cactus Can't Survive This, Neither Can You"
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You might’ve seen recent headlines about saguaro cacti keeling over in Arizona after spending nearly a month above 110° Fahrenheit (43°C).

Not even a week later, The Washington Post ran this absurd story: “Your body can build up tolerance to heat. Here’s how.”

I’m not linking to it. That’s how bad it is.

It’s not just getting a little hotter. It’s getting so hot that saguaro cacti are deflating in the desert. They evolved roughly 20,000 years ago. They’ve spent millennia adapting to a hot desert environment. They live up to 200 years in the hottest, driest environments on the planet. These cactuses are saying, “I can’t take it anymore,” and sagging over dead.

And we’re being told we can adapt.

I got curious about what temperature the human body can actually withstand, and it’s somewhere around 108°F (42°C). That’s when your proteins start to denature. A wet bulb temperature beyond 95°F (35°C) can kill a person in about six hours. No amount of heat tolerance can save anyone from that.

It strikes me as just a little ridiculous that out here in reality, parts of the world are becoming absolutely uninhabitable, and wellness writers are just now telling us to start building up our heat tolerance.

It feels like we’re being prepared and conditioned to start blaming heat deaths on someone’s “low heat tolerance,” as if it’s just another precondition that helps them rationalize indifference in the face of mass death.
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FULL ARTICLE -- https://jessicawildfire.substack.com/p/if-a-cactus-cant-survive-this-neither

#Arizona #Environment #Climate #ClimateChange #ClimateCrisis #ClimateEmergency

If a Cactus Can't Survive This, Neither Can You

On the absurdities of "personal heat tolerance."

OK Doomer

@breadandcircuses @jessicawildfire I'd hate to play devil's advocate over something so serious, but.... If "[a] wet bulb temperature beyond 95°F (35°C) can kill a person in about six hours", then how am I still alive?

Last summer, I experienced a week in India's brutal pre-monsoon heat, when "Feels Like" temperatures were over 110°F every single day. [continued in a reply because of character limit]

@breadandcircuses @jessicawildfire I stayed with family in a house with NO A/C except for a single room. We were all eating hot lunches and dinners in that heat. We were entertaining guests in that heat, watching TV in that heat. My grandparents, who were IN THEIR 80s, were NAPPING in that heat. I'm pretty confident all of that takes up more than 6 hours each day, and nobody was dying then! [continued in next reply]

@breadandcircuses @jessicawildfire There is no excuse for not acting on climate change, and having to put up with such intense heat is extremely painful. And I have no intention of denying that climate change is deadly—after all, India recently faced a number of deadly heat waves.

But, I'd like to suggest it's an overexaggeration to say that we can't adapt at least somewhat, merely as a short-term measure. "If a cactus can't survive this"—but we're not cactuses, are we?